Fighting The “ARI” Demon

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Acute Respiratory Infection (ARI) kills too many Himalayan children. It is a painful way to die: infection, either bacterial or viral, fills the lungs with puss and the child literally suffocates to death. Unfortunately, ARI is the poor person's disease, so it has not been studied till very recently. Caused by poor housing, indoor smoke, lack of protection from the cold, poor hygiene and malnutrition, most deaths occur due to delayed diagnosis and treatment.

Severe cases of ARI, manifested as pneumonia kill as many as 720,000 children in India. In Nepal, about 25 percent of the approximately 135,000 under five children who die every year succumb to ARI. How have these cruel statistics persisted? According to Dr. Mrigendra Raj Pandey, even as medical care became more organised, health planners left ARI alone because of its complexity. They concentrated instead on communicable diseases, immunisations and diarrhea. "It is difficult to imagine a primary health care programme that does not include an organised approach to counteract the leading causes of ARI related deaths," he said a few years ago.

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Himal Southasian
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